The Elephants in the Room: The GOP's War on Consumer Protection

Enter the CFPB

The CFPB is the brainchild of Professor Elizabeth Warren. It was created to be the principal education, advocacy and enforcement vehicle in America's war on financial illiteracy and predatory practices that contributed mightily to the economic abuses of the past.

It is funded by a percentage of the Federal Reserve Budget. It is designed to be tough, independent and cutting-edge in its approach. It was created to help consumers make sense of the intricacies of economic relationships. It is "the cop on the beat" that looks at conduct and practices in the mortgage, credit card, payday lending, debt collection and allied areas. Its mission includes review of how these businesses do business and communicate with consumers. It is not a paper tiger. Undoubtedly, its director will be a powerful figure in the consumer protection and regulatory world. Were there justice in politics, which there clearly is not (and I speak as a former politician), Elizabeth Warren should have been appointed its first director months ago. No one person has fought as doggedly and passionately for consumers as she. Brilliant, committed, tenacious and outspoken, with decades of experience, there is no stronger candidate for the position.

However, the qualities that make her the logical choice to lead the Bureau are precisely those which terrify the business community and Congressional conservatives.

Forty-Four of forty-seven Senate Republicans have stated unambiguously they neither want Professor Warren, nor will they agree to the appointment of any director without significant tinkering to the powers, structure and funding mechanism for the CFPB.

Not to be outdone, the Republican-controlled House Committee on Appropriations, in a budget-slashing frenzy, has slipped a provision into the appropriations bill for 2012, which will limit funding of the agency as a prelude to bringing it under the Congressional budget authorization process in FY 2013—which directly contradicts the legislation that created it.

It is clear no one on the GOP side was listening when Rep. Brad Miller (D-NC) said, "I've talked to a lot of people about whether they like the freedom to be cheated on credit cards, to be cheated on mortgages, to be cheated on overdraft fees, and I found that was not really a freedom they valued. They don't really value that any more than Americans 100 years ago valued the right to buy rancid beef."

They are doing the American people a disservice and continuing to damage their wounded brand.